Mills v. Lantrip

185 S.W. 514, 170 Ky. 81, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 21
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 9, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 185 S.W. 514 (Mills v. Lantrip) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mills v. Lantrip, 185 S.W. 514, 170 Ky. 81, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 21 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

OpinioN of the Court by

Judge Clarke

Reversing.

The appellant, Will T. Mills, was clerk of the Hopkins county court from January, 1906, to January, 1914 On August 24, 1914, appellees, twenty-one in number, who were taxpayers and citizens of Hopkins county, brought this suit against appellant to recover of him for the benefit of all the citizens and taxpayers of said county the sum of $1,888.91, alleged to have been illegally allowed and paid to him by the fiscal court for his services during the time he was county clerk as aforesaid.

In the petition the fees alleged to have been paid to appellant illegally were divded into nineteen different classes or items, and the total number and aggregate amount of payments made to appellant during the eight years he was county clerk under each of these several classes of payments are set out, and those payments [82]*82made more than five years before the institution of the suit are indicated, but each particular item is not set out.

The petition further alleges that, at the regular April, 1914, term of the fiscal court, the appellees made written demand on said court to institute the necessary-action to recover of appellant all of said sums, and that said court failed and refused to institute action, or to take any steps . to recover said money or any part thereof.

Appellant filed a demurrer, a motion to strike out and a motion to require appellees to make their petition more definite and certain, all of which were overruled. He then filed answer, set-off and counterclaim, in which, he admitted the payments to him as charged in the petition, but denied that they were illegally paid, and pleaded res judicata as to a part of the items, the statute of limitations to all payments made five years before the institution of the action and attempted to plead as a set-off and counterclaim items to the amount of $946.00 alleged to be due him from the county for service rendered by him as county clerk and, in addition, he alleged that the appellees were not acting in good faith.

The demurrer was sustained to the separate paragraph in which the set-off and counterclaim were asserted, and a motion to strike out of the only other paragraph in the answer so much of same as pleaded res judicata, and the allegation that appellees were not acting in good faith was sustained and said parts stricken from the petition.

The cause then being submitted upon the pleadings a judgment was rendered against appellant for the sum of $794.30, the aggregate of the following items, which, does not include any item barred by limitation:

Item No. 1. Entering orders of exoneration.........$244.50
Item No. 2. For recording sheep claims..................... 105.30
Item No. 3. For recording delinquent tax list...... 20.00'
Item No. 6. Making small individual index 1 books .............................................................................. 75.00'
Item No. 7. Recording school superintendent settlements .............................................................. 5.50
Item No. 8. Recording sheriff’s settlements............ 36.00
Item No. 9. Making orders calling terms of fiscal court ..................................................................... 15.75
[83]*83Item No. 10. Recording license' collections reports ...................-.............................................................. $56.00
Item No. 11. Registering voters........................................... 7.35
Item No. 12. Recording report’ of delinquent taxes .............................................................................. 22..50
Item No. 13. Recording school census.............................. 44.85
Item No. 15. Recording sheriff’s sale for taxes... 40.25
Items 16 & 19. Listing omitted tax payments............... 106.00
Item No. 17. Orders appointing tax supervisors 12.50
Item No. 18. Orders approving assessor’s report 3.00
$794.50

This court has frequently held that a fiscal court is a court of limited jurisdiction and is only authorized to do such things as the statute permits or directs it to do, and that it has no authority to allow compensation or fees to any officer as a claim against the county unless the law provides for the payment thereof. Wortham v. Grayson County, 13 Bush 53; Morgantown Deposit Bank v. Johnson, 108 Ky. 507; 56 S. W. 825; Woodruff v. Shea, 152 Ky. 657, 153 S. W. 1005; Taylor v. Riney, 156 Ky. 393, 161 S. W. 203.

And this court has clearly distinguished in many cases the proper method to pursue to avoid an order of the fiscal court appropriating money, holding that if there was authority of law to make a payment, the orders making the allowance were not void, and the only relief is by appeal. Hickman County v. Scarborough, 148 Ky. 561, 147 S. W. 31. But if there was no authority of law for the payment, the orders making the allowance were void and the money could be recovered in a direct proceeding by the proper officers of the county, or upon their failure after demand, by a suit filed by a citizen upon behalf of the county. Commonwealth v. Richmond, 148 Ky. 849, 147 S. W. 913. And that in allowing claims the fiscal court acts ministerially and not judicially. Owen County v. Walker, 141 Ky. 516, 133 S. W. 236.

Counsel for appellant in order to sustain his contention that the order of the fiscal court allowing him the claims above set out are binding judgments and cannot be attacked collaterally, cites the case of Boone Co. v. Dills, 5 K. L. R. 135, which upholds that contention, but the opinion in that case was rendered by the Superior Court, has never been followed and is at variance with the many decisiohs of this court rendered since that [84]*84time upon the same question, and we are not now in a position to accept it as authority even if we concurred in its conclusions, which we do not.

It is provided by our statutes, section 1749, that no fee bill shall he made out or compensation allowed for any ex officio service rendered or to he rendered by any officer, and this section has been construed in many cases that the fiscal court is without authority to allow compensation for any service required of an officer unless a fee is expressly allowed by law. Wortham v. Grayson County, 13 Bush 53; Morgantown Deposit Bank v. Johnson, 108 Ky. 507; Suter v. Stone, 108 Ky. 518; Mitchell v. Henry County, 124 Ky. 833; Young v. Jefferson County, 100 S. W. 335; Fiscal Court v. Pflanz, 127 Ky. 8; Owen County v. Walker, 141 Ky. 516 and Elliott v. Commonwealth, 144 Ky. 335.

Appellant concedes that items 1, 9, 15 and 17 as set out above are not warranted by law, and that the judgment for the recovery of these items is correct.

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.W. 514, 170 Ky. 81, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-lantrip-kyctapp-1916.